Sols said:
You're coming at this from the same perspective as incorporation, opening bank account, or going on vacation. Where is the best place to incorporate? Where can I open a personal bank account? Where are the best beaches in the southern hemisphere?
Asset protection is different. Asset protection isn't a service: it's the result of a carefully arranged structure.
The first is to identify the assets. Is it money? How much? Hundreds of thousands? Millions? Tens of millions?
Is it a movable property? Immovable property? Intellectual property?
Is it a company? In what sense is the company an asset to you? All the shares or part of it?
The second is identify the threat. From whom are you protecting the assets? Who do you know or suspect will be coming for you? How capable and motivated are they? What happens if they can claim your assets?
In many cases, people think of hiding money from the tax authority as asset protection. The easiest solution to that is to relocate to a low-tax jurisdiction ASAP. No further complications needed.
When setting up asset protection structures, there some frequently recurring factors that are worth pointing out.
Jurisdictions:
- USA: South Dakota, Nevada, Wyoming, more and more states are rushing to enact laws for ironclad asset protection.
- Cook Islands: tried and tested jurisdiction.
- Samoa: interesting laws to pre-empt seizures and hostile takeovers.
- Isle of Man, Jersey, Guernsey: classic UK territories with generally good protection.
- Liechtenstein: popular for a good reason.
- Cayman Islands and BVI: classic non-European UK territories, very popular. Anguilla and TCI are less popular options, but with similar laws available.
- Nevis: known for having courts that are hostile to creditors and foreign intervention.
- Mauritius: a more reputable option than for example Seychelles and Belize, with many of the same benefits.
- Switzerland: stable banking and a strong culture of handling assets.
Service providers:
Banking: mostly depends on size of wealth and on the service provider. If your asset protection structure has multiple entities, the entities may have different bank accounts in different locations.
But before all that, the very first thing you need to consider is timing. Asset protection needs to be set up at least one or a couple of years before there is a credible threat. Otherwise, the creditor or threat actor might be able to evaporate the whole structure under fraudulent conveyance regulations or similar laws.
I.e., if you're going through a divorce, the time to place your assets in protection was 1-2 years before the threat of divorce was real.
Then, speak with a local lawyer to understand your obligations under local law. Putting your wealth in a Cook Islands trust might not matter if a local court can send you to jail because of non-compliance of x, y, and/or z local regulations.
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